One of the biggest productions children’s TV has ever seen is about to hit our screens.

One of the biggest productions children’s TV has ever seen is about to hit our screens. And we’d expect nothing less from the man in charge, Welshman Russell T Davies, than a fusion of Harry Potter-style spectacle, Whovian science and sharp, clever writing

Q: Tell us about Wizards Vs Aliens – what is the show about?

A: It’s a fun adventure story about a young boy called Tom (Scott Haran) and his best friend Benny (Percelle Ascott). Tom’s secret is that he’s a wizard, and you think that would be exciting enough, but then they discover aliens exist and are coming to Earth to consume all the magic. Let battle lines be drawn!

Q: What are Tom and Benny like?

A: The big hero of the show is Tom; he’s 16 and he’s secretly a wizard. At the beginning you think he’s the coolest kid at school, he’s good looking, he’s good at football, he does his homework with magic, he’s got it all. He then learns that he’s got to grow up because he has to wage a secret war against aliens. As a result he becomes friends with someone he wouldn’t normally become friends with, a kid called Benny Sherwood from his year at school, who’s a science genius. Benny’s science know-how is invaluable to Tom in his fight against the Nekross and though they don’t get on at first, during the course of the series they become best friends.

Q: Who are the Nekross?

A: The Nekross are an alien race from the planet Nekron, who feed on magic. And now they’ve come to devour the wizards on Earth. It’s a secret war – schoolboy wizard Tom and his best mate Benny still have to cope with school and everyday life, while the Nekross are plotting on the far side of the moon. And the battle’s only just begun.

Q: Who plays them?

A: Gwendoline Christie and Jefferson Hall who are marvellous as Lexi and Varg. We wanted brilliant actors, who had this huge stature on screen. They’re tall and elegant, which makes the Nekross incredibly imposing and very alien when we see them looming over Tom and Benny.

Q: So is this a battle of good versus evil and is it always clear who is going to win?

A: At the heart of this it is good versus evil, but as the series goes on you learn more about the Nekross and realise that it’s not so black and white. The wizards become ruthless and sometimes their power can be used for dark forces so we explore good and evil as we go on.

Q: How did you come up with the idea and how does this show differ from other fantasy/sci-fi shows?

A: I came up with the idea for this show with Phil Ford. We were having a discussion about how he likes supernatural shows and I like science fiction shows and the fact that we could never put the two together. Harry Potter never has to fight a robot and Doctor Who never has to fight a witch, the two things always kept very separate in every example of a genre. We just had a eureka moment. Why don’t we do a show in which that happens? A show where magic fights laser beams and aliens meet wizards, the whole show came alive from that moment really.

Q: What do you want children to get from watching the show?

A: What you really want children to have out of this is 30 minutes of fun and really exciting adventures. Sometimes they’re funny, sometimes they’re thrilling, sometimes a little bit scary. You want them to enjoy it but there are also some good lessons about life and friendship and family right at the heart. Beautifully designed aliens, special effects, chases, gags, and monsters, are all things I want on television all day long.

Q: What’s the difference between writing for adults and writing for children?

A: There are differences but they are not profound differences. It’s just a matter of using a different voice for kids. That doesn’t mean it’s simpler, in fact I think you have to be a little bit sharper because children are such clever and sophisticated viewers. You’ve got to deliver something that’s as good as it could possibly be or you lose them and I like that challenge.

Q: Was it easy to cast, or was it a long process?

A: We auditioned massively, hundreds and hundreds of people. The team saw hundreds of people before I saw the hundreds of people they got down to, you just have to trawl everywhere. Eventually we found those two and when we tried them together it was just magic, absolute magic. I can’t praise them enough; every day I watch the footage that they shoot and they literally get better and better and better as it goes along.

Q: How did you convince Brian Blessed to play the Nekross King?

A: All the way through filming we were saying we need someone like Brian Blessed. You don’t imagine you’re ever going to get him. In the end we took a deep breath and said. ‘Look, if he’s meant to be like Brian Blessed, why don’t we try Brian Blessed?’ We sent the tapes off to him and he loved it! We’re so grateful to him cause there’s no voice like his, he’s brilliant.

Q: Was it good to be back working in Cardiff again?

A: For me to work in Cardiff it’s like going home. I first went to Cardiff in 2004 where I set up a sort of empire with Doctor Who, Sarah Jane and Torchwood. It was like our fantasy factory, so when we created Wizards Vs. Aliens that’s where we turned. We knew we would have the designers, the effects people, the costume people and so on to create a glorious show.

Q: You’ve long been involved in children’s drama and must have seen it change and evolve. Do you have any thoughts on how it might look in the future?

A: I want Wizards Vs Aliens to run for 10 years, I think there’s enough fuel in it for stories to run forever, I’ll take 20 years if people would give it to me. I have been working in children’s telly for 25 years now and people have been ringing the death bells about it for all of those years but it keeps on existing. All it takes is imagination and a lot of people with a lot of imagination keep on flooding in to this industry. Although you have to be careful – you should never take children’s television for granted. Its like, while there’s one lively mind out there, there will always be great programmes.

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